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Replies: 33 / Views: 4,638 |
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
785 Posts |
I agree with starting a set of franklin halfs. With your budget an MS set could be assembled in 3-4 months and maybe a few more months if you wanted to include the proofs. I believe this set is undervalued.
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Moderator
 United States
23522 Posts |
And consider: If a series is "undervalued," it means you're not going to get a realistic return from it either. Cheap to get in, but cheap to get out of as well because it's "undervalued."
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1234 Posts |
If you are just going to your LCS (Local Coin Shop) then it just comes down to what they have same with auctions online. Hours of searching sites and coin shops and you blow your entire budget in one purchase... OR you could try CRH (Coin Roll Hunting) I'm not a huge fan of cents but I will take a look at them from time to time. I'm a huge fan of nickels check out my first posts on them here: https://goccf.com/t/166164https://goccf.com/t/166172Dimes are nice too for silver finds anything above that is harder and harder to find silver in, but there are the state and ATB Quarters, full date is easy but getting both mints can be a pain. (I'm full P&D till 2009 territories). This is kind of a scatter gun question (maybe what you wanted) but can you be more specific as to your wants? With $200 per month you could grab a couple of boxes of nickels sort and return then get a box of dimes... ok they are 250 but as I said they will be returned for the most part. Then you get a few silvers maybe and take the 199.85 back and buy the fancy ones from the shops, then start over the next month. OK yeah this may sound like a lot of work but if you get a few Whitman books and fill as you go it can be quite interesting, plus if you have kids they may have better eyes than you and it's not really slave labor if you give it to them for their kids. another note on state and ATB Quarters and westward journey nickels... because of the collecting frenzy they have produced and high mint numbers it is a basic rule in my LCS's that they MAY be worth something in 200 years, If content changes in nickels, which it seems like it's going to happen anytime now, the melt value may go up in the next 40-50 years... only took 20-30 for silver to boom out of all proportion. as ChesterB said... sorry no clue how to imbed ... There is no real answer to this as people are going to steer you towards what they like and a lot of things can be collected on that size of budget. for me it's the thrill of the hunt... The first forum link I posted is about a 1941 Mint error I found in a roll, I paid 5 cents for it. Once it is graded and slabed who knows how much a dealer might charge you for it. Now I hear some of you saying I'm not going to search through thousands of dollars of nickels for a single error coin... and the time to get one silver out of $100-200 is not worth it. Ok how about a compromise, do $10 each in nickels, dimes and quarters each month and see if you catch the roll hunting bug. $30 (or $40 with cents) and most of it goes back.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1839 Posts |
My suggestion would be to collect what you like. If you're not sure what you like you might want to try putting together a basic type set. In doing this you'll end up researching many types of US coinage and will likely find a type that "speaks to you". Then consider working on a set of that type. My son and I have been working on filling a Whitman's 20th Century Type folder with mostly VF coins and it's been a great way to get educated on each type. Don't be surprised if doing this encourages you to venture into 19th Century type coins. Once that happens you'll be "all in", hook, line and sinker. https://www.whitman.com/store/Inven...y-Type-CoinsNotice that I typed the word "type" quite a bit? Perhaps there's a reason for that 
Edited by Tbone 12/31/2013 7:13 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2133 Posts |
Here's my pennyworth: If you live near a museum that has coins, go and look at theirs to get inspiration. If you're young even though you have a reasonable budget, collect coins you get in your change, collect a date set and work on improving the quality. After collecting change, I started on Anglo-Saxon stycas (about 737-867 AD in northern England and southern Scotland), mainly because they're easy to read, not many types and at the time they were cheap; nobody else was interested. Don't be afraid to collect what interests you, don't worry what others think. Befriend one or more coin dealers, shopkeepers, bank tellers and ask them to look out for coins for you.
I've become enthused recently by Australian and New Zealand penny tokens, Hard Times tokens, Canadian tokens and 19th century medallions. If I lived in the US, I would collect Hard Times tokens but in the UK, they're almost as rare as hen's teeth.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7840 Posts |
"Type" collecting is an expansive means of collecting multiple coins of different designs. 
Edited by oih82w8 12/31/2013 7:52 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
561 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
179 Posts |
I think that you should buy the Whitman book on Large Cents. Get to learn these beautiful classic coppers. Well within your budget, with a good selection always and everywhere, buying nice problem free coins with good color in ANY grade is money well spent. Learn the varieties, scarce dates... You can learn things which will made you a smart buyer. These old coppers hook you, they REALLY do. My first "serious" kid collecting was large cents, on a. $3 a lawn mow budget I bought 1796 lib cap, 1818, 1832, 1847. All nice coins.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1959 Posts |
Put me down on the side of the Type collecting crowd. After you have acquired most types of coins, usually a bug will bite you and you will naturally begin to gravitate toward the series that interests you most. This is what I did, and that's what my son is doing. He really enjoys it. At $200 per month you should be able to get several holes filled per month in the beginning. The tougher holes may require 2-3 months to fill. For me, the 7070 is one of my favorite sets to pull out and look at.
As far as collecting as an investment, I would slightly disagree with SsuperDdave. If coin collecting is a life long hobby and you make good decisions on price and quality, the value of your collection will grow. I have plenty of coins I have picked up long ago for a fraction of their current worth. For me, time is my friend. I don't flip coins for a quick buck. I truly love quality coins and enjoy accumulating them. Part of that enjoyment includes watching their value grow. If you are into coin collecting just to make money to live on, I agree, it would be difficult, but, I will say certain coin series have outperformed some of my mutual funds in my IRA, but that's probably more of a function of not having the greatest financial advisor. I digress. I just don't want new collectors to be discouraged when so many people say coins are a bad investment. You should collect coins for the passion of the coin. You need the passion to stay long term, and the patience to not over pay, and the determination to learn what makes a quality coin. 30 years later you might find yourself with a collection of coins worth $100K you invested say $55k in.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3283 Posts |
Silver is fairly low right now so with any silver set you will probably see the value increase over the next few years. Walkers, Franklins, Washington quarters, mercury and Roosevelt dimes all will work easily on your budget. But, as stated by many here, do some reading and see what strikes your fancy. Collect for fun and expect nothing in terms of investment; although we all know collecting coins is not the worse think you can do with expendable cash (by a long shot). The problem is we usually give them away instead of cashing out in the end.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7840 Posts |
To be a little more specific than my earlier post, if you want an easy to fill folder/album 20th Century Type coins should be a great start, then move on to the 7070 Type album if you are so inclined. Here is a good starter album; 20th Century US Type Set WHITMAN CLASSIC ALBUM No 9139 Here is a good description of the 20th Century Collection at various levels; http://typesets.wikidot.com/20th-century
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Valued Member
United States
125 Posts |
Good point about the 20th Century album. This album can be done in higher grades without breaking the bank and you might just fall in love with a certain series that way.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Regardless of what ever you chose to collect, try to remember this is a hobby, not an investment. Your chances of making a collection of anything and reselling for a profit are almost non existing. Of course you could spend many hours on ebay or similar to resell but again, this is a hobby. Have fun and enjoy it. You never really will is all you do is think about selling it all tomorrow.
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Moderator
 United States
16679 Posts |
I always tell newbies they should start out with Lincoln Cents 1909-1958. Most in lower grades are obtainable, and pretty easy to find at any shop or show but, you don't want that route so.. I would do Liberty nickels as your first set. Not too many, and looks like you have the budget for the keys too 
swcoin.ecrater.com
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Pillar of the Community
United States
688 Posts |
 with Vermontensium, Liberty nickels are the way to go. As many have said, doing a type set will give you a good idea what you find appealing. I just started collecting a year ago and found several series that I really loved (Capped Bust Halves, Liberty nickels, Indian Head cents). I recently decided to do a Liberty nickel series in high VF to low AU. In that grade range, I can get most of the coins for under $50, except for a few. There are only three key date coins in the series and with your budget completing this series shouldn't take that long. As others have said, whichever series you decide to collect, study it thoroughly and do your research
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Replies: 33 / Views: 4,638 |
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